| # The JSONB Format | |
| This document describes SQLite's JSONB binary encoding of | |
| JSON. | |
| ## 1.0 What Is JSONB? | |
| Beginning with version 3.45.0 (circa 2024-01-01), SQLite supports an | |
| alternative binary encoding of JSON which we call "JSONB". JSONB is | |
| a binary format that stored as a BLOB. | |
| The advantage of JSONB over ordinary text RFC 8259 JSON is that JSONB | |
| is both slightly smaller (by between 5% and 10% in most cases) and | |
| can be processed in less than half the number of CPU cycles. The built-in | |
| [JSON SQL functions] of SQLite can accept either ordinary text JSON | |
| or the binary JSONB encoding for any of their JSON inputs. | |
| The "JSONB" name is inspired by [PostgreSQL](https://postgresql.org), but the | |
| on-disk format for SQLite's JSONB is not the same as PostgreSQL's. | |
| The two formats have the same name, but they have wildly different internal | |
| representations and are not in any way binary compatible. | |
| The central idea behind this JSONB specification is that each element | |
| begins with a header that includes the size and type of that element. | |
| The header takes the place of punctuation such as double-quotes, | |
| curly-brackes, square-brackets, commas, and colons. Since the size | |
| and type of each element is contained in its header, the element can | |
| be read faster since it is no longer necessary to carefully scan forward | |
| looking for the closing delimiter. The payload of JSONB is the same | |
| as for corresponding text JSON. The same payload bytes occur in the | |
| same order. The only real difference between JSONB and ordinary text | |
| JSON is that JSONB includes a binary header on | |
| each element and omits delimiter and separator punctuation. | |
| ### 1.1 Internal Use Only | |
| The details of the JSONB are not intended to be visible to application | |
| developers. Application developers should look at JSONB as an opaque BLOB | |
| used internally by SQLite. Nevertheless, we want the format to be backwards | |
| compatible across all future versions of SQLite. To that end, the format | |
| is documented by this file in the source tree. But this file should be | |
| used only by SQLite core developers, not by developers of applications | |
| that only use SQLite. | |
| ## 2.0 The Purpose Of This Document | |
| JSONB is not intended as an external format to be used by | |
| applications. JSONB is designed for internal use by SQLite only. | |
| Programmers do not need to understand the JSONB format in order to | |
| use it effectively. | |
| Applications should access JSONB only through the [JSON SQL functions], | |
| not by looking at individual bytes of the BLOB. | |
| However, JSONB is intended to be portable and backwards compatible | |
| for all future versions of SQLite. In other words, you should not have | |
| to export and reimport your SQLite database files when you upgrade to | |
| a newer SQLite version. For that reason, the JSONB format needs to | |
| be well-defined. | |
| This document is therefore similar in purpose to the | |
| [SQLite database file format] document that describes the on-disk | |
| format of an SQLite database file. Applications are not expected | |
| to directly read and write the bits and bytes of SQLite database files. | |
| The SQLite database file format is carefully documented so that it | |
| can be stable and enduring. In the same way, the JSONB representation | |
| of JSON is documented here so that it too can be stable and enduring, | |
| not so that applications can read or writes individual bytes. | |
| ## 3.0 Encoding | |
| JSONB is a direct translation of the underlying text JSON. The difference | |
| is that JSONB uses a binary encoding that is faster to parse compared to | |
| the detailed syntax of text JSON. | |
| Each JSON element is encoded as a header and a payload. The header | |
| determines type of element (string, numeric, boolean, null, object, or | |
| array) and the size of the payload. The header can be between 1 and | |
| 9 bytes in size. The payload can be any size from zero bytes up to the | |
| maximum allowed BLOB size. | |
| ### 3.1 Payload Size | |
| The upper four bits of the first byte of the header determine size of the | |
| header and possibly also the size of the payload. | |
| If the upper four bits have a value between 0 and 11, then the header is | |
| exactly one byte in size and the payload size is determined by those | |
| upper four bits. If the upper four bits have a value between 12 and 15, | |
| that means that the total header size is 2, 3, 5, or 9 bytes and the | |
| payload size is unsigned big-endian integer that is contained in the | |
| subsequent bytes. The size integer is the one byte that following the | |
| initial header byte if the upper four bits | |
| are 12, two bytes if the upper bits are 13, four bytes if the upper bits | |
| are 14, and eight bytes if the upper bits are 15. The current design | |
| of SQLite does not support BLOB values larger than 2GiB, so the eight-byte | |
| variant of the payload size integer will never be used by the current code. | |
| The eight-byte payload size integer is included in the specification | |
| to allow for future expansion. | |
| The header for an element does *not* need to be in its simplest | |
| form. For example, consider the JSON numeric value "`1`". | |
| That element can be encode in five different ways: | |
| * `0x13 0x31` | |
| * `0xc3 0x01 0x31` | |
| * `0xd3 0x00 0x01 0x31` | |
| * `0xe3 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x01 0x31` | |
| * `0xf3 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x01 0x31` | |
| The shortest encoding is preferred, of course, and usually happens with | |
| primitive elements such as numbers. However the total size of an array | |
| or object might not be known exactly when the header of the element is | |
| first generated. It is convenient to reserve space for the largest | |
| possible header and then go back and fill in the correct payload size | |
| at the end. This technique can result in array or object headers that | |
| are larger than absolutely necessary. | |
| ### 3.2 Element Type | |
| The least-significant four bits of the first byte of the header (the first | |
| byte masked against 0x0f) determine element type. The following codes are | |
| used: | |
| <ol> | |
| <li type="0"><p><b>NULL</b> → | |
| The element is a JSON "null". The payload size for a true JSON NULL must | |
| must be zero. Future versions of SQLite might extend the JSONB format | |
| with elements that have a zero element type but a non-zero size. In that | |
| way, legacy versions of SQLite will interpret the element as a NULL | |
| for backwards compatibility while newer versions will interpret the | |
| element in some other way. | |
| <li value="1"><p><b>TRUE</b> → | |
| The element is a JSON "true". The payload size must be zero for a actual | |
| "true" value. Elements with type 1 and a non-zero payload size are | |
| reserved for future expansion. Legacy implementations that see an element | |
| type of 1 with a non-zero payload size should continue to interpret that | |
| element as "true" for compatibility. | |
| <li value="2"><p><b>FALSE</b> → | |
| The element is a JSON "false". The payload size must be zero for a actual | |
| "false" value. Elements with type 2 and a non-zero payload size are | |
| reserved for future expansion. Legacy implementations that see an element | |
| type of 2 with a non-zero payload size should continue to interpret that | |
| element as "false" for compatibility. | |
| <li value="3"><p><b>INT</b> → | |
| The element is a JSON integer value in the canonical | |
| RFC 8259 format, without extensions. The payload is the ASCII | |
| text representation of that numeric value. | |
| <li value="4"><p><b>INT5</b> → | |
| The element is a JSON integer value that is not in the | |
| canonical format. The payload is the ASCII | |
| text representation of that numeric value. Because the payload is in a | |
| non-standard format, it will need to be translated when the JSONB is | |
| converted into RFC 8259 text JSON. | |
| <li value="5"><p><b>FLOAT</b> → | |
| The element is a JSON floating-point value in the canonical | |
| RFC 8259 format, without extensions. The payload is the ASCII | |
| text representation of that numeric value. | |
| <li value="6"><p><b>FLOAT5</b> → | |
| The element is a JSON floating-point value that is not in the | |
| canonical format. The payload is the ASCII | |
| text representation of that numeric value. Because the payload is in a | |
| non-standard format, it will need to be translated when the JSONB is | |
| converted into RFC 8259 text JSON. | |
| <li value="7"><p><b>TEXT</b> → | |
| The element is a JSON string value that does not contain | |
| any escapes nor any characters that need to be escaped for either SQL or | |
| JSON. The payload is the UTF8 text representation of the string value. | |
| The payload does <i>not</i> include string delimiters. | |
| <li value="8"><p><b>TEXTJ</b> → | |
| The element is a JSON string value that contains | |
| RFC 8259 character escapes (such as "<tt>\n</tt>" or "<tt>\u0020</tt>"). | |
| Those escapes will need to be translated into actual UTF8 if this element | |
| is [json_extract|extracted] into SQL. | |
| The payload is the UTF8 text representation of the escaped string value. | |
| The payload does <i>not</i> include string delimiters. | |
| <li value="9"><p><b>TEXT5</b> → | |
| The element is a JSON string value that contains | |
| character escapes, including some character escapes that part of JSON5 | |
| and which are not found in the canonical RFC 8259 spec. | |
| Those escapes will need to be translated into standard JSON prior to | |
| rendering the JSON as text, or into their actual UTF8 characters if this | |
| element is [json_extract|extracted] into SQL. | |
| The payload is the UTF8 text representation of the escaped string value. | |
| The payload does <i>not</i> include string delimiters. | |
| <li value="10"><p><b>TEXTRAW</b> → | |
| The element is a JSON string value that contains | |
| UTF8 characters that need to be escaped if this string is rendered into | |
| standard JSON text. | |
| The payload does <i>not</i> include string delimiters. | |
| <li value="11"><p><b>ARRAY</b> → | |
| The element is a JSON array. The payload contains | |
| JSONB elements that comprise values contained within the array. | |
| <li value="12"><p><b>OBJECT</b> → | |
| The element is a JSON object. The payload contains | |
| pairs of JSONB elements that comprise entries for the JSON object. | |
| The first element in each pair must be a string (types 7 through 10). | |
| The second element of each pair may be any types, including nested | |
| arrays or objects. | |
| <li value="13"><p><b>RESERVED-13</b> → | |
| Reserved for future expansion. Legacy implements that encounter this | |
| element type should raise an error. | |
| <li value="14"><p><b>RESERVED-14</b> → | |
| Reserved for future expansion. Legacy implements that encounter this | |
| element type should raise an error. | |
| <li value="15"><p><b>RESERVED-15</b> → | |
| Reserved for future expansion. Legacy implements that encounter this | |
| element type should raise an error. | |
| </ol> | |
| Element types outside the range of 0 to 12 are reserved for future | |
| expansion. The current implement raises an error if see an element type | |
| other than those listed above. However, future versions of SQLite might | |
| use of the three remaining element types to implement indexing or similar | |
| optimizations, to speed up lookup against large JSON arrays and/or objects. | |
| ### 3.3 Design Rationale For Element Types | |
| A key goal of JSONB is that it should be quick to translate | |
| to and from text JSON and/or be constructed from SQL values. | |
| When converting from text into JSONB, we do not want the | |
| converter subroutine to burn CPU cycles converting elements | |
| values into some standard format which might never be used. | |
| Format conversion is "lazy" - it is deferred until actually | |
| needed. This has implications for the JSONB format design: | |
| 1. Numeric values are stored as text, not a numbers. The values are | |
| a direct copy of the text JSON values from which they are derived. | |
| 2. There are multiple element types depending on the details of value | |
| formats. For example, INT is used for pure RFC-8259 integer | |
| literals and INT5 exists for JSON5 extensions such as hexadecimal | |
| notation. FLOAT is used for pure RFC-8259 floating point literals | |
| and FLOAT5 is used for JSON5 extensions. There are four different | |
| representations of strings, depending on where the string came from | |
| and how special characters within the string are escaped. | |
| A second goal of JSONB is that it should be capable of serving as the | |
| "parse tree" for JSON when a JSON value is being processed by the | |
| various [JSON SQL functions] built into SQLite. Before JSONB was | |
| developed, operations such [json_replace()] and [json_patch()] | |
| and similar worked in three stages: | |
| 1. Translate the text JSON into a internal format that is | |
| easier to scan and edit. | |
| 2. Perform the requested operation on the JSON. | |
| 3. Translate the internal format back into text. | |
| JSONB seeks to serve as the internal format directly - bypassing | |
| the first and third stages of that process. Since most of the CPU | |
| cycles are spent on the first and third stages, that suggests that | |
| JSONB processing will be much faster than text JSON processing. | |
| So when processing JSONB, only the second stage of the three-stage | |
| process is required. But when processing text JSON, it is still necessary | |
| to do stages one and three. If JSONB is to be used as the internal | |
| binary representation, this is yet another reason to store numeric | |
| values as text. Storing numbers as text minimizes the amount of | |
| conversion work needed for stages one and three. This is also why | |
| there are four different representations of text in JSONB. Different | |
| text representations are used for text coming from different sources | |
| (RFC-8259 JSON, JSON5, or SQL string values) and conversions only | |
| happen if and when they are actually needed. | |
| ### 3.4 Valid JSONB BLOBs | |
| A valid JSONB BLOB consists of a single JSON element. The element must | |
| exactly fill the BLOB. This one element is often a JSON object or array | |
| and those usually contain additional elements as its payload, but the | |
| element can be a primite value such a string, number, boolean, or null. | |
| When the built-in JSON functions are attempting to determine if a BLOB | |
| argument is a JSONB or just a random BLOB, they look at the header of | |
| the outer element to see that it is well-formed and that the element | |
| completely fills the BLOB. If these conditions are met, then the BLOB | |
| is accepted as a JSONB value. | |